Sentences with phrase «further dehumanize»

What we ought to know is how a court system, a system that many place their trust in to find justice could possibly continue to further dehumanize the sacred life of an Indigenous woman.

Not exact matches

Now, Uber can't even release an integration with Spotifywithout writers pointing out that the partnership «furthers the ongoing logistical process of dehumanizing Uber drivers.»
Writing in The Christian Century nearly two decades ago, educator Richard Baer noted: «So far the church has not sufficiently grasped the nature of the present [ecological] crisis, has not understood how powerfully dehumanizing is man's wanton exploitation of his natural environment, has not appreciated the degree to which man - made ugliness and the fouling of natural beauty are corroding man's mind and spirit» («Land Misuse: A Theological Concern,» October 12, 1966, p. 1240).
Print has already gone too far in dehumanizing the church.
The film critic David Ehrlich has tweeted that the film feels like it wasn't even made by humans, and I'd go further, to say that the movie dehumanizes its leading woman and attempts, disconcertingly, to dehumanize its audience.
One need to go no farther than a short drive down the turnpike to civil rights expert, Dr. Yohuru Williams of Fairfield University, who has demonstrated with thunderous authority, through the actual words and sayings of Dr. Martin Luther King, that the leader of the U.S. civil rights movement would have never stood beside those who seek to privatize and monetize public education, nor would he have supported the high stakes testing obsession that has crippled the promise of public education, dehumanized children, and driven countless educators out of the profession.
Today's approach to teaching and learning is far more dehumanizing than even the approaches I experienced in business.
In doing so, this array also offers an alternative point of view, with show - stopping pieces such modern masters as Georg Baselitz, Jean - Michel Basquiat, Andy Warhol, Joseph Beuys and Robert Rauschenberg, all of which confirm that, far from Orwell's grim and dehumanized vision, 1984 was in fact a year of dynamic and diverse individual creativity.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z